'Matariya' Mass Iftar Table...Egyptian Viral Tradition in Ramadan

Muslims gather along a street-long table for break their
Ramadan fast together in a mass iftar meal in the 15th day of the
Muslim holy month, in the Matariya suburb in the northeast of Egypt's
capital Cairo om April 16, 2022. AFP.
Muslims gather along a street-long table for break their Ramadan fast together in a mass iftar meal in the 15th day of the Muslim holy month, in the Matariya suburb in the northeast of Egypt's capital Cairo om April 16, 2022. AFP.
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'Matariya' Mass Iftar Table...Egyptian Viral Tradition in Ramadan

Muslims gather along a street-long table for break their
Ramadan fast together in a mass iftar meal in the 15th day of the
Muslim holy month, in the Matariya suburb in the northeast of Egypt's
capital Cairo om April 16, 2022. AFP.
Muslims gather along a street-long table for break their Ramadan fast together in a mass iftar meal in the 15th day of the Muslim holy month, in the Matariya suburb in the northeast of Egypt's capital Cairo om April 16, 2022. AFP.

The mass iftar table in Cairo’s Matariya street has become a Ramadan phenomenon after it was set for the ninth year in row on Thursday, upon an initiative launched by the region’s inhabitants. The event was attended by over 3,000 fasters.

Among the attendees was South Korea’s Ambassador to Egypt, Hong Jin-Wook, who greeted the fasters, saying in Arabic: “Ramadan in Egypt is different.” According to local media, the ambassador also said he “loves the Egyptian popular plates such as ‘Kushari’, ‘Mahshi’, and ‘Qatayef’.”

Singer Rami Gamal applauded the mass iftar on Twitter, saying he’s “working on a song about the event that will be released within days.”

The “Matariya Table” was trending on Egyptian social media over the past hours, described by some activists as “the longest iftar table ever in Egypt”, while others celebrated the event, saying “the event and its simple details brought joy to the fasting inhabitants of the Matariya street.”

Mohammed Moftah, one of the table’s organizers, said “the idea debuted years ago by a group of friends who organized a mass iftar at the ‘Hamada Farm’, in the Matariya street, and invited families and neighbors. Then, it has expanded in the following years and turned into a carnival-like occasion.” “Our organization is punctual and the tasks are well-distributed. There is a cooking division guided by professional cooks, a communication and invitations division, and a decorations and banners division,” he told Asharq Al-Awsat, noting that “we do all that with love and dedication. As the young organizers of this table, we don’t even find time to sit on it and eat until two hours after the sunset.”

Moftah highlighted “the love and cooperation among the Matariya inhabitants,” and slammed “the dramas that link popular neighborhoods and suburbs to violence and bullying,” stressing that “occasions like the Matariya table are always a good opportunity to show a beautiful picture of the popular areas.”

Many artists and public figures in Egypt and the Arab world celebrated the mass iftar table. Singer Assala shared a video of the gathering on Twitter, with a caption saying: “From Matariya, Egypt…Thank you.”

For his part, sport journalist Ibrahim Fayeq described the occasion as “a mass Egyptian iftar with a taste of love and kindness.”

The table also caught the attention of many Arab bloggers such as Emirati Ibrahim Behzad who attended the iftar this year.

“Great ambiances that you only find in Egypt and with its kind people,” he wrote on Twitter, while Algerian novelist Ahlam Mosteghanemi shared some pictures of the celebration and wrote: “The largest mass iftar spread the joy in the streets of Egypt.”



Muddy Footprints Suggest 2 Species of Early Humans Were Neighbors in Kenya 1.5 Million Years Ago

An aerial view shows a research team standing alongside the fossil footprint trackway at the excavation site on the eastern side of Lake Turkana in northern Kenya in 2022. AP
An aerial view shows a research team standing alongside the fossil footprint trackway at the excavation site on the eastern side of Lake Turkana in northern Kenya in 2022. AP
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Muddy Footprints Suggest 2 Species of Early Humans Were Neighbors in Kenya 1.5 Million Years Ago

An aerial view shows a research team standing alongside the fossil footprint trackway at the excavation site on the eastern side of Lake Turkana in northern Kenya in 2022. AP
An aerial view shows a research team standing alongside the fossil footprint trackway at the excavation site on the eastern side of Lake Turkana in northern Kenya in 2022. AP

Muddy footprints left on a Kenyan lakeside suggest two of our early human ancestors were nearby neighbors some 1.5 million years ago.
The footprints were left in the mud by two different species “within a matter of hours, or at most days,” said paleontologist Louise Leakey, co-author of the research published Thursday in the journal Science.
Scientists previously knew from fossil remains that these two extinct branches of the human evolutionary tree – called Homo erectus and Paranthropus boisei – lived about the same time in the Turkana Basin.
But dating fossils is not exact. “It’s plus or minus a few thousand years,” said paleontologist William Harcourt-Smith of Lehman College and the American Museum of Natural History in New York, who was not involved in the study.
Yet with fossil footprints, “there’s an actual moment in time preserved,” he said. “It’s an amazing discovery.”
The tracks of fossil footprints were uncovered in 2021 in what is today Koobi Fora, Kenya, said Leaky, who is based at New York's Stony Brook University.
Whether the two individuals passed by the eastern side of Lake Turkana at the same time – or a day or two apart – they likely knew of each other’s existence, said study co-author Kevin Hatala, a paleoanthropologist at Chatham University in Pittsburgh.
“They probably saw each other, probably knew each other was there and probably influenced each other in some way,” The Associated Press quoted him as saying.
Scientists were able to distinguish between the two species because of the shape of the footprints, which holds clues to the anatomy of the foot and how it’s being used.
H. erectus appeared to be walking similar to how modern humans walk – striking the ground heel first, then rolling weight over the ball of the foot and toes and pushing off again.
The other species, which was also walking upright, was moving “in a different way from anything else we’ve seen before, anywhere else,” said co-author Erin Marie Williams-Hatala, a human evolutionary anatomist at Chatham.
Among other details, the footprints suggest more mobility in their big toe, compared to H. erectus or modern humans, said Hatala.
Our common primate ancestors probably had hands and feet adapted for grasping branches, but over time the feet of human ancestors evolved to enable walking upright, researchers say.
The new study adds to a growing body of research that implies this transformation to bipedalism – walking on two feet — didn’t happen at a single moment, in a single way.
Rather, there may have been a variety of ways that early humans learned to walk, run, stumble and slide on prehistoric muddy slopes.
“It turns out, there are different gait mechanics – different ways of being bipedal,” said Harcourt-Smith.